In order to bring you the best possible user experience, this site uses Javascript. If you are seeing this message, it is likely that the Javascript option in your browser is disabled. For optimal viewing of this site, please ensure that Javascript is enabled for your browser.
skip over navigation
Print
PRINT  
Email
EMAIL

News from UT Southwestern

Stories about UT Southwestern's groundbreaking biomedical research

More Information

Dotted Line

UT Southwestern
Medical Center Newsroom

Dotted Line

To access the Medical Center Newsroom, including news staff and media contact information, please click here.

Looking for
Archived News?

Dotted Line

For all archived news, please click here.

News Story Links

Dotted Line

Synthetic compound may lead to drugs to fight pancreatic, lung cancer

  

DALLAS – March 10, 2011 – Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have identified a chemical compound that may eventually lead to a drug that fights cancers that are dependent on a particular anti-viral enzyme for growth.

The researchers are testing the compound’s effectiveness at fighting tumors in mice. If it is successful, they will then work to develop a drug based on the compound to combat pancreatic and non-small cell lung cancer, two cancer types in which this particular enzyme, TBK-1, often is required for cancer cell survival.

  Michael White and Yi-Hung Ou
  Researchers Dr. Michael White and graduate student Yi-Hung Ou identified a compound that blocks the actions of an enzyme that is often required for cancer cell survival.
 

“Our prediction is that TBK-1 is a good pharmacological intervention target for a subset of lung and pancreas cancers that are addicted to the activity of this enzyme. We believe there is a large population of cancer patients that could respond to inhibition of this activity,” said Dr. Michael White, professor of cell biology and senior author of the study in the Feb. 18 issue of Molecular Cell.

The investigation, which lasted three and a half years, revealed how activation of the natural virus-fighting protein TBK-1 is hijacked in cancer cells to support growth and survival.

More than 250,000 compounds were screened to find one that would inhibit the enzyme’s cancer-protection mechanism. The most effective, a compound called 6-aminopyrazolopyrimidine developed in collaboration with pharmaceutical company Amgen, blocked TBK-1’s effects in 40 percent to 50 percent of the non-small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer tissue cultures tested, reducing cancer growth. TBK-1 is activated by the Ras family of oncogenes, which are mutated in 40 percent of lung cancers and 90 percent of pancreatic cancers.

“We found a biological activity that some cancer cells need to be able to survive, and we found a way to turn it off,” said Dr. White.

The next step, he said, would be ascertaining in rodents whether 6-aminopyrazolopyrimidine can permeate tumors, “hit the target and be effective.” If the compound continues to demonstrate efficacy, researchers would begin work to develop a drug with the compound’s properties for further testing.

The compound appears to migrate into all tissues of studied mice, but the UT Southwestern researchers don’t know yet if it will penetrate solid tumors in the animal, “which is an incredibly important step in evaluating chemicals as drug leads,” Dr. White said.

“We’ve illuminated the dark matter of regulation of an incredibly important oncogenic survival pathway. We’ve found a new regulatory arm of this pathway, and we’ve discovered you can inhibit it pharmacologically. That’s target validation. The next step is to translate that target validation into development of a medicine,” he said.

Other UT Southwestern researchers involved in the study were lead author Yi-Hung Ou, graduate student in cancer biology; Michael Torres and Rosalyn Ram, student research assistants in cancer biology; Dr. Tzuling Cheng, postdoctoral researcher in pediatrics; Dr. Christina Roland, surgery resident; and Dr. Rolf Brekken, associate professor of surgery and pharmacology. Researchers from Hybrigenics of Paris and Amgen Inc. of Thousand Oaks, Calif., also participated.

The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Welch Foundation.

Visit www.utsouthwestern.org/cancer to learn more about UT Southwestern’s clinical services in cancer.

###

Media Contact: Debbie Bolles
214-648-3404
debbie.bolles@utsouthwestern.edu

To automatically receive news releases from UT Southwestern via e-mail,
subscribe at www.utsouthwestern.edu/receivenews 

 

Drop Shadow